Popular #Skateboarding posts on Instagram are either ridiculously innovative or ridiculously idiotic. First I see a guy tailsliding a ledge while wholly standing on the tail and somehow popping out from that into a manual, then I see a group of guys jumping over an evidently wild alligator while one guy distracts it. π
@D Yep! The thing that ferments it in this case is precisely what you need to make more. I'm fortunate that it was still preserved enough when I bought the tempeh from the store. :)
@ajroach42@kensanata More generally, this might be highlighting that services tend to hide away technical aspects from general users, making the UX seamless for clients until suddenly they throw up cryptic errors or provide l33t install documentation.
@ajroach42@kensanata For instance, Mybinder.org handles hosting and running #Jupyter notebooks that are interactive; this is perfect for people that either aren't in a position where they would install and use Jupyter on their own systems or even could do so (lockdown), but it also familiarizes them with tech in a less-threatening way. I figure that this increases users' perception that they can handle technical stuff, and eventually explore running Jupyter thr slvs
@ajroach42@kensanata I like situations that allow for a client to progressively take on more responsibilities, according to what they're interested in or comfortable with.
I was talking to a friend who was thinking about the internet we want to have, decentralized, less silos, a bit like the nineties where it was possible to have static pages, host email, write your own CGI scripts, and it was all step by step easy and possible if that was what you wanted. And we got talking about the kind of things we need to today to get this back. Do you have reading suggestions? Blogs to read? Projects? People to follow?
@thurloat@xvu I'd be legally concerned about going down this route. Inform the guy when you're 100% done with what he wanted done, then suggest that you're able to make changes if he has any requests.
@pnathan Ah, I think the variety of packaging and (non-)pasteurized would make this problematic, but wow this suggestion is on a whole 'nother level of mass-produced ππ